It's known as the Oppai-Kaiju effect. The islands of Japan generate a sort anti-gravity field, which allows breasts to behave as if in microgravity. It's also what allows Godzilla and friends to become 50 stories tall, and lets ninjas run up the side of a skyscraper.

Apologies for the delayed release of the next version of Quickfort. All my coding time has been consumed by another project (the coolest Chrome extension you may ever see ) and I haven't made any time for Quickfort.

Fortunately, a new DF version was released in the meantime with minecarts and tracks (!!!). So I will make sure the next QF release supports those properly.

BTW, if you'd be interested in being an alpha/beta tester of my completely unrelated Chrome extension in about 3 weeks, send me a PM. It's basically a page-tree sidebar in the spirit of Firefox's Tree Style Tabs, but with some really nifty extra functionality.

It's known as the Oppai-Kaiju effect. The islands of Japan generate a sort anti-gravity field, which allows breasts to behave as if in microgravity. It's also what allows Godzilla and friends to become 50 stories tall, and lets ninjas run up the side of a skyscraper.

I have same error in new version of Quickfort. Version 2.01 work fine though.

I solved this issue for me by changing the delimiter character in parse loop in function GetBlueprintInfo in blueprints.ahk, original "crossed c" somehow ended like regular c while the program was running and this broke whole parsing.

I can share new Quickfort.exe somewhere if anyone is interested. Just download original 2.03 and replace the file.

I have same error in new version of Quickfort. Version 2.01 work fine though.

I solved this issue for me by changing the delimiter character in parse loop in function GetBlueprintInfo in blueprints.ahk, original "crossed c" somehow ended like regular c while the program was running and this broke whole parsing.

I can share new Quickfort.exe somewhere if anyone is interested. Just download original 2.03 and replace the file.

Nice find! I will change that (and/or find a better solution than using a weird char there) in next version.

The main new feature is compatibility with DF 0.34.10, and minecart track support. Some new aliases have been created which will greatly simplify the process of putting together tracks in blueprints; see the the section about minecart tracks in the user manual for details.

This release also fixes a number of issues reported in this thread. VenomIreland's problem with some community blueprints not working is fixed; the problem turned out to be that these blueprints didn't have a first line like "#dig". If Quickfort doesn't find such a first line it will now just assume that #dig is desired. Robik's discovery of the "cent symbol" problem should also be fixed for good.

Lastly, the performance of qfconvert has been greatly improved. The conversion process is now 10-20x faster, maybe more; this is the "Thinking..." phase seen after you hit Alt+D in Quickfort on Windows. Especially if you use large blueprints, you'll see an obvious speed increase. This change actually accounts for the majority of work done this release, and brought with it a number of bug fixes, optimizations, and generally cleaner Python code.

I have also tested material-selection in this version and it continues to work flawlessly for me. I have been unable to reproduce Pletske's problem.

Starting with this release, I have migrated the Quickfort source code repository and issue tracker over to Github. The old Google Code project will be deleted soon, after I migrate all the issues in its tracker over to Github. Please use the new Github issue tracker for any new issues going forward.

It's known as the Oppai-Kaiju effect. The islands of Japan generate a sort anti-gravity field, which allows breasts to behave as if in microgravity. It's also what allows Godzilla and friends to become 50 stories tall, and lets ninjas run up the side of a skyscraper.